Favorite Knowledge Visits are a great way to learn things if the mindset is right; treat them as if it was industrial espionage. Image from wikimedia commons A knowledge visit is a great idea – a team goes to visit another company or another team, sees the way they work,
Favorite A recent paper from the Gartner group seems to contain two basic assumptions about knowledge management which I think are worth addressing. See what you think. The Gartner paper is entitled Automate Knowledge Management With Data Science to Enable the Learning Organization, and contains the following blocks of text:
Favorite Here is an interesting report on the use of KM in supporting IT service desks in the US and the UK. For the detail, please see the report, but some of the highlights are below: Knowledge management is the second-most adopted process for IT support organizations after Incident Management
Favorite What is the price, or cost, of your knowledge inventory? In fact, you already pay the cost without knowing it. Creative commons image from pxhere Let’s look at the cost of acquiring and maintaining the inventory of tacit and explicit knowledge. Tacit knowledge As people become more experienced (through
Favorite Here’s a story about how Knowledge can be found in the Long Tail within a community of practice. I blogged recently about the Long Tail of Knowledge, and how a Community of Practice can find answers and advice from practitioners other than the core group of company experts. Here
Favorite When we set up our KM systems, lets make it as simple as possible for the knowledge-seeker. Let’s aim for the one-stop shop. Image from geograph.org.uk It is common for Knowledge Managers to start to plan their KM systems based on the supply of knowledge, or based on the
Favorite Here is another reprieve from the archives, looking at the 2 ways in which KM can add value. There are two ways in which Knowledge Management can add value to an organisation, and we can look at them in this way: Finding Knowledge Better; Finding Better Knowledge. The first
Favorite Here is a sad story, about how trying to save costs in KM destroyed value. The moral of the story is about hopw bring people together face to face and letting them experience the knowledge for themseves, in context, established the necessary credibility for re-use. The organisation in question
Favorite From this published article comes three examples of quantified value from KM. Image from wikimedia commons The article is entitled “Assessing the Business Value of Knowledge Retention Projects: Results of Four Case Studies”, and much of it comes from the work of Larry Todd Wilson, who operates a Knowledge Harvesting